Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Chapter 03

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About This Presentation

Fundamentals of Corporate Finance Chapter 01


Slide Content

Fundamentals of Corporate
Finance, 2/e
ROBERT PARRINO, PH.D.
DAVID S. KIDWELL, PH.D.
THOMAS W. BATES, PH.D.

Chapter 3: Financial Statements, Cash
Flows, and Taxes

Learning Objectives
1.DISCUSS GENERALLY ACCEPTED
ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES (GAAP) AND THEIR
IMPORTANCE TO THE ECONOMY.
2.EXPLAIN THE BALANCE SHEET IDENTITY AND
WHY A BALANCE SHEET MUST BALANCE.
3.DESCRIBE HOW MARKET-VALUE BALANCE
SHEETS DIFFER FROM BOOK-VALUE BALANCE
SHEETS.

Learning Objectives
4.IDENTIFY THE BASIC EQUATION FOR THE
INCOME STATEMENT AND THE INFORMATION IT
PROVIDES.
5.UNDERSTAND THE CALCULATION OF CASH
FLOWS FROM OPERATING, INVESTING, AND
FINANCING ACTIVITIES REQUIRED IN THE
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS.
6.EXPLAIN HOW THE FOUR MAJOR FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS DISCUSSED IN THIS CHAPTER ARE
RELATED.

Learning Objectives
7.IDENTIFY THE CASH FLOW TO A FIRM’S
INVESTORS USING ITS FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS.
8.DISCUSS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
AVERAGE AND MARGINAL TAX RATES.

Financial Statements
oPURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
•Provide stakeholders a foundation for evaluating
the financial health of a firm
creditors
employees
management
stockholders

Financial Statements
oPURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
•Provide stakeholders a foundation for evaluating
the financial health of a firm.
customers
general Public
regulators
suppliers

Financial Statements
oPURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
•Evaluate a firm’s internal environment
efficiency
effectiveness
risk level

Financial Statements
oPURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
•Evaluate a firm’s interaction with the external
environment
corporate citizenship
social responsibility
assessment of the external environment
response to the external environment

Financial Statements
oPURPOSE OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
•Provide information about the performance of
the firm
stakeholders want to compare actual vs. potential
performance

Financial Statements and Accounting
Principles
oGAAP
•Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
(GAAP)
accounting rules and standards that public companies
must adhere to when they prepare financial statements
and reports
established by the Financial Accounting Standards
Board (FASB) and authorized by the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC)

Financial Statements and Accounting
Principles
oINTERNATIONAL GAAP
•Uniform accounting rules and procedures
promoted by the International Accounting
Standards Board
•Firms in the European Union are moving
toward a “European GAAP”
•Economic and political pressure is building in
the United States and Europe to develop a
unified accounting system

Financial Statements and Accounting
Principles
oGAAP
•Guidelines, not rules
Firms have discretion about how their financial
information is presented.
No two firms are required to have identical statements.

Financial Statements and Accounting
Principles
oGAAP
•Guidelines, not rules.
Alternative terms on financial statements
–balance sheet, statement of financial condition
–income statement, statement of operations, profit and loss
statement
–cost-of-goods-sold, cost-of -sales, cost-of-revenue, cost-of-
services-sold

Financial Statements and Accounting
Principles
oFIVE IMPORTANT ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
1.Assumption of Arm’s Length Transaction
Parties involved in an economic transaction arrive at a
decision independently and rationally.
2.Cost Principle
Asset values are recorded at the cost for which they
were acquired.

Financial Statements and Accounting
Principles
oFIVE IMPORTANT ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
3.Realization Principle
Revenue is recognized when a transaction is
completed, although cash may be received earlier or
later.
4.Matching Principle
Revenue is matched with the expense incurred to
generate it.

Financial Statements and Accounting
Principles
oFIVE IMPORTANT ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
5.Going Concern Assumption
Assume a company will continue to operate for the
predictable future.

Financial Statements and Accounting
Principles
oANNUAL REPORT
•Summarizes the overall performance of a firm
for the most recent fiscal year
•Information
the company, its products, its activities, and its future
summary of financial performance for the most recent
year
audited financial statements, five-year summary of
financial data

The Balance Sheet
oFIRM ASSETS & FUNDING AT A POINT IN TIME
•Left side of a balance shows assets a firm owns
and uses to generate revenue
•Right side of the balance sheet shows sources
of the funds used to acquire assets)1.3('EquityrsStockholdeTotalsLiabilitieTotal
AssetsTotal
+
=

Diaz Manufacturing Balance Sheets as
of December 31

The Balance Sheet
oITEM ORDER
•Assets listed in order of liquidity
•Liabilities listed in order in which they are due
to be paid
•Stockholders’ equity listed last
Common stockholders are entitled to assets remaining
after all other providers of funds are paid.

The Balance Sheet
oCURRENT ASSETS
•Assets likely to be converted to cash within a
year (or one operating cycle)
marketable securities
accounts receivable
inventory

The Balance Sheet
oCURRENT LIABILITIES
•Liabilities scheduled to be paid within a year (or
one operating cycle)
accounts payable
accrued wages
debt with less than a year’s maturity
taxes

The Balance Sheet
oNET WORKING CAPITAL(3.2)sLiabilitie Current Total -
AssetsCurrent Total Capital WorkingNet =

The Balance Sheet
oNET WORKING CAPITAL EXAMPLE
•Diaz Manufacturing
Total current assets = $1,039.8 million
Total current liabilities = $377.8 million
Net working capital = Total current assets
-Total current liabilities
= $1,039.8 million -$377.8 million
= $662.0 million

The Balance Sheet
oINVENTORY ACCOUNTING
•Inventory (least liquid current asset) reported
using one of two methods
FIFO (first-in-first-out) assumes merchandise is sold in
the order it was acquired by a firm.
LIFO (last-in-first-out) assumes merchandise is sold in
the reverse of the order it was acquired by a firm.

The Balance Sheet
oINVENTORY ACCOUNTING
•When the cost of inventory is increasing
FIFO reporting says a firm sold the less expensive
inventory and leads to
–higher balance in inventory
–lower cost-of-goods-sold
–higher taxable income
–higher income taxes
–higher net income

The Balance Sheet
oINVENTORY ACCOUNTING
•When the cost of inventory is increasing
LIFO reporting says a firm sold the more expensive
inventory and leads to
–lower balance in inventory
–higher cost-of-goods-sold
–lower taxable income
–lower income taxes
–lower net income

The Balance Sheet
oINVENTORY ACCOUNTING
•When the cost of inventory is decreasing
FIFO reporting says a firm sold the more expensive
inventory and leads to
–lower balance in inventory
–higher cost-of-goods-sold
–lower taxable income
–lower income taxes
–lower net income

The Balance Sheet
oINVENTORY ACCOUNTING
•When the cost of inventory is decreasing
LIFO reporting says a firm sold the less expensive
inventory and leads to
–higher balance in inventory
–lower cost-of-goods-sold
–higher taxable income
–higher income taxes
–higher net income

The Balance Sheet
oINVENTORY ACCOUNTING
•Firms may switch from one inventory
accounting method to the other under
extraordinary circumstances but not frequently

The Balance Sheet
oLONG-TERM ASSETS
•Real Assets
land
buildings
equipment
•Intangible Assets
goodwill
patents
copyrights

The Balance Sheet
oLONG-TERM ASSETS
•Real assets decline with use and are depreciated
Depreciation expense reduces taxable income and
income taxes.
Assets are depreciated using either the straight line or
accelerated depreciation method.
•Intangible assets lose value over time and are
amortized (equivalent to depreciated)

The Balance Sheet
oLONG-TERM LIABILITIES
•Long-term debt
bank loans
mortgages
bonds with a maturity longer than one year

The Balance Sheet
oEQUITY
•Common Stock
ownership with control in a firm
•Preferred Stock
ownership without control in a firm
features make it an equity security that resembles debt

The Balance Sheet
oOTHER BALANCE SHEET ACCOUNTS
•Retained earnings
Profit kept and used to acquire assets.
•Treasury stock
Shares of its own stock a firm holds rather than sell
them to the public.

Market Value vs. Book Value
oRECORDING ASSET VALUE
•Assets are traditionally reported at historical
cost on a balance sheet
•Balance sheet amount does not reflect current
market value –only the acquisition cost

Market Value vs. Book Value
oASSET VALUATION
•Better information is provided to management
and investors by marking-to-market —
reporting balance sheet items at current market
values
difficult to determine market values of assets
•The difference between the market values of
assets and liabilities is a realistic estimate of the
market value of shareholders’ equity

The Income Statement
oINCOME STATEMENT: OVERVIEW
•Measures the profitability of a firm for a
reporting period
•Revenue is income from selling products and
services –for cash or credit
•Expenses include costs of providing products
and services, and asset utilization (depreciation
and amortization)(3.3) Expenses – Revenues income Net =

Diaz Manufacturing Income
Statements

The Income Statement
oNET INCOME EXAMPLE
•Diaz Manufacturing
Revenues = $1,563.7 million
Expenses = $1,445.2 million
Net Income = Revenues –Expenses
= $1,563.7 million -$1,445.2 million
= $ 118.5 million

The Income Statement
oDEPRECIATION
•The cost of a physical asset, such as plant or
machinery, is written off over its lifetime. This
is called depreciation, a non-cash expense
•Firms use one of these depreciation methods
straight-line depreciation
accelerated depreciation
–Firms may choose to use one for internal purposes and
another for tax purposes or for statements released to the
public.

The Income Statement
oAMORTIZATION
•Amortization expense is related to using
intangible assets
goodwill
patents
licenses
–Like depreciation, it is a non-cash expense.

The Income Statement
oEXTRAORDINARY ITEM
•Income or expense associated with events that
are infrequent and abnormal
separated from the results of ordinary income
shown separately on the income statement

The Income Statement
oEBITDA AND EBIT
•Earnings-before-interest-taxes-depreciation-
and-amortization (EBITDA)
income from selling goods and services minus the cost
of providing them
•Earnings-before-interest-and-taxes (EBIT)
EBITDA minus depreciation and amortization

The Income Statement
oEBT AND NI
•Earnings-before-taxes (EBT)
EBIT minus interest expense
taxable income
•Net income (NI)
EBT minus taxes

Statement of Retained Earnings
oRETAINED EARNINGS
•Shows cumulative effect of adjustments to
shareholders’ equity resulting from profit,
losses, and paying dividends
•Shows changes in the account for a period
based on profit, loss, or dividend paid

Diaz Manufacturing Statement of
Retained Earnings

Cash Flows
oNET CASH FLOWS VERSUS NET INCOME
•Accountants focus on net income and
shareholders focus on net cash flows. These are
not the same because of delays in inflows and
outflows, and non-cash revenues and expenses

Cash Flows
oCASH FLOWS TO INVESTORS
•Cash flows available to investors from operating
activities (CFOA)(3.4) expenses Noncash
TaxesCurrent – EBIT CFOA
+
=

Cash Flows
oCFOA EXAMPLE
•Diaz Manufacturing
EBIT = $168.4 million
Current Taxes = $44.3 million
Non-cash expenses = $83.1 millionmillion $207.2
$83.1m $44.3m - $168.4m
Expenses Cash-Non Taxes Current – EBIT CFOA
=
+=
+=

Cash Flows
oCASH FLOWS TO WORKING CAPITAL
•To compute the net cash flows into or out of
working capital(3.5) NWC- NWC CFNWC
Period PreviousPeriod Current=

Cash Flows
oCFNWC EXAMPLE
•Diaz Manufacturing
NWC 2011 = $662.0 million
NWC 2010 = $342.0 millionmillion $320.0
$342.0 - $662.0m
NWC – NWC CFNWC
201020112011
=
=
=

Cash Flows
oSTATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
•Summarizes cash outflows and cash inflows
during a period
•Cash flows result from operating activities,
investing activities, and financing activities
•Net cash flows equals cash inflows minus cash
outflows

Diaz Manufacturing Statement of Cash
Flows

Cash Flows
oSTATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS ORGANIZATION
•Operating Activities
cash inflows
–sell goods and services
cash outflows
–raw materials
–inventory
–salaries and wages
–utilities
–rent

Cash Flows
oSTATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS ORGANIZATION
•Investing Activities
cash outflows and inflows due to
–buying and selling long-term assets such as plant and
equipment
–buying and selling bonds and stocks issued by other firms

Cash Flows
oSTATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS ORGANIZATION
•Financing Activities
cash inflow
–issue debt
–issue equity
–borrow money
cash outflow
–pay interest or dividends
–repay loan principal
–purchase treasury stock

Interrelations Among the Financial
Statements

Federal Income Tax
oCORPORATE INCOME TAX
•U.S. has a progressive tax with rates ranging
from 15 percent to 39 percent
higher taxable income = higher the tax liability

Corporate Tax Rates for 2010

Federal Income Tax
oAVERAGE VERSUS MARGINAL TAX RATE
•Average tax rate
total taxes paid divided by taxable income for the
period
•Marginal tax rate
rate paid on the last dollar earned or the next dollar
that will be earned

Federal Income Tax
oDIVIDENDS AND INTEREST ARE NOT EQUAL
•U.S. tax code
allows interest payments on debt to reduce firms’
taxable income
does not allow dividend payments to equity to reduce
firms’ taxable income
–debt financing has a lower cost relative to equity financing
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